Replace TMPS When Installing New Tires?

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Phil Florida

Junior Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2023
Posts
1
Reaction score
0
Location
Florida
Ram Year
2018
Engine
3.6 L
I have a 2018 Ram 1500 that I am replacing the tires for the first time.

The vehicle was manufactured April 2018 so the sensors are 6 years old.

I expect to get 6 years of service out of the new tires so the sensors at that point would be 12 years old.

Should I have the sensors replaced or just roll the dice and go with the original sensors?

If I did end up with a bad sensor can the trouble code be cleared until I have it replaced?

Any advice appreciated.
 

Scottly

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2018
Posts
1,207
Reaction score
2,256
Location
Safety Harbor, FL
Ram Year
2021
Engine
HO 6.7 Cummins
When the sensor goes bad, the code will not disappear because it is a constant fault. If you seriously expect 6yrs life out of those tires, for the cost of those sensors I'd replace them with factory units, not the cheap aftermarket ones. But that's just me.
 

Atcer2018

Senior Member
Military
Joined
Aug 10, 2019
Posts
1,034
Reaction score
1,385
Location
Virginia
Ram Year
2018
Engine
3.6
I’d pass on the sensors. In my humble opinion it’s worth the gamble. Replacing TPMS sensors used to be an expensive endeavor but today it’s relatively cheap, heck even Walmart does them. I currently have four vehicles with two kids in college. The vehicles range from 5 to 13 years old. All vehicles are on the original factory sensors except one wheel which had a sensor damaged by the shop that put her last set of tires on two years ago. The shop used a generic sensor cloned to the original and it works perfectly.
 

diymirage

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2024
Posts
303
Reaction score
307
Location
Michigan
Ram Year
2017
Engine
5.7
my local tire shop charges 100 dollars to install a TPMS sensor

or, i could buy a set of them for 80 dollars online, and have them install them while they are swapping out the tires and they wont charge me since it is allready dismounted

guess what i would do?
 

Curmudgeon

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2017
Posts
447
Reaction score
985
Location
York, Pennsylvania
Ram Year
2014 1500 Laramie 4x4 QC, True Blue Pearl
Engine
5.7L Hemi
I have a 2015 SLT, still on the original sensors at 184,000 miles.

Now that I've said that..........lol

My 2014, 107,000 miles, all 4 sensors are factory and no trouble.

Of course, now that I've said that... :rolleyes:


EDITED TO ADD: I just realized my TPMS sensors have outlasted both RKE FOBS which were just recently replaced.
 

Curmudgeon

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2017
Posts
447
Reaction score
985
Location
York, Pennsylvania
Ram Year
2014 1500 Laramie 4x4 QC, True Blue Pearl
Engine
5.7L Hemi
my local tire shop charges 100 dollars to install a TPMS sensor

or, i could buy a set of them for 80 dollars online, and have them install them while they are swapping out the tires and they wont charge me since it is allready dismounted

guess what i would do?

Yes, but are the $80 online sensors filled with Nitrogen? :rolleyes: :rofl:
 

White six four

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2019
Posts
478
Reaction score
782
Location
Wisconsin
Ram Year
2016
Engine
6.4
I just had new tires put on last week and got new sensors installed at the same time on my 16. For me it was the convenience factor since they were already putting on the new tires. I'm gone most weeks for work and if I do have to bring the truck somewhere it usually involves dropping it off the Sunday before and picking it up Friday. A trip there and back with 2 vehicles 15-30 minutes one way depending on the shop. Also while I'm gone the wife wouldn't have a backup vehicle during the week in case something happened to her suv (I usually take my work beater car during the week. Truck is parked).

If I worked closer to home or was home more in general I probably wouldn't have changed them out.
 

Jeepwalker

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2017
Posts
3,239
Reaction score
3,459
Location
WI
Ram Year
2012 Reg Cab, 4x4
Engine
5.7 Hemi
IDK what the failure rate on online sensors is...but the last two vehicles I bought the sensors myself (RockAuto), and at least one was faulty on each vehicle. We didn't test them in advance, which we should have. One older vehicle I just left them. That wipes out some of the savings if ya need to pay to replace them. Probably just my bad luck.
 

diymirage

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2024
Posts
303
Reaction score
307
Location
Michigan
Ram Year
2017
Engine
5.7
I just had new tires put on last week and got new sensors installed at the same time on my 16. For me it was the convenience factor since they were already putting on the new tires. I'm gone most weeks for work and if I do have to bring the truck somewhere it usually involves dropping it off the Sunday before and picking it up Friday. A trip there and back with 2 vehicles 15-30 minutes one way depending on the shop. Also while I'm gone the wife wouldn't have a backup vehicle during the week in case something happened to her suv (I usually take my work beater car during the week. Truck is parked).

If I worked closer to home or was home more in general I probably wouldn't have changed them out.
My tire shop is close enough that I just toss a bike in the bed and pedal that home, takes about half an hour and is great cardio
 

CamperMike

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 11, 2019
Posts
419
Reaction score
461
Location
Peoria, IL
Ram Year
2018
Engine
Hemi 5.7
I wouldn't bother replacing them now. But if you choose to I'd go with a quality unit either oem or a major supplier like Huf or Schrader or VDO. They make many of the oem Tpms sensors.
 

Latest posts

Staff online

Forum statistics

Threads
195,652
Posts
2,872,934
Members
156,490
Latest member
OasisNinjaBat
Top